- Joined
- May 24, 2007
- Messages
- 73,114
- Likes
- 10,947
- Points
- 113
100 x ~$100,000 is on the order of $10M.
Even if it adds up to $1B, it's in the noise.
Even if it adds up to $1B, it's in the noise.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I think the real points to be made are the lack of good effect, and the massive debt/interest payments we're going to see from that kind of wasteful spending.
u do realize that recession spending is a norm throughout the world even with a teabagger hall of famer like stephen harper as our pm north of the 49th? and to attach the appropriate context- this problem was aggravated by bush's military adventurism in mesopotamia and tax cuts that he could never justify. nevertheless, i wouldnt fret too much because the chinese are unwilling to float their yen and appear satisfied with the greenback. and europe might be experiencing another shock with their debt crisis.
Dude,
I fully concur that republicans and Bush spent a lot and even ran up the debt overly so. However, at the time the democrats took over congress, gasoline was $2, unemployment was 5%, housing prices were stable, homes weren't forcelosed on like they are now, the banks were doing fine, etc.
Aquiles Suarez, listed as an economic adviser to the McCain campaign in a July 2007 McCain press release, was formerly the director of government and industry relations for Fannie Mae. The Senate Lobbying Database says Suarez oversaw the lending giant's $47,510,000 lobbying campaign from 2003 to 2006.
And other current McCain campaign staffers were the lobbyists receiving shares of that money. According to the Senate Lobbying Database, the lobbying firm of Charlie Black, one of McCain's top aides, made at least $820,000 working for Freddie Mac from 1999 to 2004. The McCain campaign's vice-chair Wayne Berman and its congressional liaison John Green made $1.14 million working on behalf of Fannie Mae for lobbying firm Ogilvy Government Relations. Green made an additional $180,000 from Freddie Mac. Arther B. Culvahouse Jr., the VP vetter who helped John McCain select Sarah Palin, earned $80,000 from Fannie Mae in 2003 and 2004, while working for lobbying and law firm O'Melveny & Myers LLP. In addition, Politico reports that at least 20 McCain fundraisers have lobbied for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, pocketing at least $12.3 million over the last nine years.
For years McCain campaign manager Rick Davis was head of the Homeownership Alliance, a lobbying association that included Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, real estate agents, homebuilders, and non-profits. According to Politico, the organization opposed congressional attempts at regulation of Fannie and Freddie, along the lines of what John McCain is currently proposing. In his capacity of president of the group, Davis went on record in 2003 and insisted that no further reform of the lenders was necessary, in contradiction to his current boss's sentiments. "[Fannie and Freddie] are subject to an innovative and stringent risk-based capital stress test," Davis wrote. "The toughest in the financial services industry."
u do realize that he inherited a 1.3 trillion dollar deficit; 2 wars he had to pay for and the worse economic crisis since the fdr days. and the data suggests a halt: the jobs created, saved and lost numbers are the best since 2007 or prior to the crisis- i think the hemorrhaging has stopped. and if your genuinely concerned about cutting the deficit- i would suspect that u would favour a health care overhaul because that's the largest contributor to the deficit and maybe u might also favour an estate tax as well- both of which the republicans fiercely oppose. and lets not forgot that the president did institute a budget freeze and early on he pledged that he would halve the deficit- so he's actually listening to u guys on the right. thats a departure from his predecessor who only listened to two men: dick cheney and jesus.
the interesting thing about your analysis is that u seem to look at your country in a vacuum but the world is a lot more integrated than u might think and the entire world is hurting.
and a lot of things are said on the campaign trail but lets look at mccain's inner circle:
http://motherjones.com/mojo/2008/09/mccains-fannie-and-freddie-connections
He didn't inherit a $1.3T deficit, he inherited a $450B deficit.
Obama was essentially correct when he said he inherited a budget deficit of $1.3 trillion. Though the budget deficit for 2008 was a then-record $458.6 billion, the CBO issued a projection in January 2009, just days before Obama took office that the budget deficit would reach $1.2 trillion that year, before the cost of any new stimulus plan or other legislation was taken into account.
Health care is not the largest contributor to the deficit. People not having jobs and thus not paying taxes is a huge contributor to the deficits.
off the top of my head- u guys spend something like 17 or 18% of your gdp on health care and that is by far your largest expenditure. and if your so concerned about tax collection- why dont u just tax high income earners to make up for any shortfalls in unemployment?
i think u're being a little disingenuous or reading to much drudge report because every independent organization has confirmed that number. and btw- bush jr inherited a fairly robust economy. although, the same couldnt be said for bush sr and clinton.
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.co...e-deficit-under-republicans/?fbid=EUNKAX0A9YU
off the top of my head- u guys spend something like 17 or 18% of your gdp on health care and that is by far your largest expenditure. and if your so concerned about tax collection- why dont u just tax high income earners to make up for any shortfalls in unemployment?
He inherited a deficit of $458B, like I said.
Bush inherited a recession and a massive stock market crash.
We don't spend 17% or 18% of our GDP on health care. We spend on insurance, which is not at all the same thing. It's because government policies have created a bogus and not-free market for the product. When the consumer has to pay for insurance, like auto insurance, I see the insurance companies advertising they can save you money if you switch to their coverage. A free market would mean we'd see them advertising the same sorts of things for catastrophic health coverage, too.
massive stock market crash? recession? the it bubble burst and the tigr economy collapsed, thats it. if u lived in south korea or japan or even seattle- maybe u should complain because their entire economy burst into flames but u dont.
and the cbo as well as independent news organizations have verified the presidents assertion.
insurance companies dont care about competition, no, there only concern is risk minimization. i know- i work for them indirectly as a broker.
NASDAQ in 2000:
![]()
Investors (which was ordinary people) lost several $trillion in wealth.
it was the a bubble and it burst. ppl made speculative risks and they lost big.
insurance companies dont care about competition, no, there only concern is risk minimization. i know- i work for them indirectly as a broker.
We don't spend 17% or 18% of our GDP on health care. We spend on insurance, which is not at all the same thing. It's because government policies have created a bogus and not-free market for the product.
Well, if having the government regulate and subsidize health insurance is a “takeover,” that takeover happened long ago. Medicare, Medicaid, and other government programs already pay for almost half of American health care, while private insurance pays for barely more than a third (the rest is mostly out-of-pocket expenses). And the great bulk of that private insurance is provided via employee plans, which are both subsidized with tax exemptions and tightly regulated.
